Senin, 25 Oktober 2010

Brake shoe

A brake shoe is the part of a braking system which carries the brake lining in the drum brakes used on automobiles, or the brake block in train brakes and bicycle brakes.

Automobile drum brake

The brake shoe carries the brake lining, which is riveted or glued to the shoe. When the brake is applied, the shoe moves and presses the lining against the inside of the drum. The friction between lining and drum provides the braking effort. Energy is dissipated as heat.
Modern cars have disc brakes all round, or discs at the front and drums at the rear. An advantage of discs is that they can dissipate heat more quickly than drums so there is less risk of overheating.
The reason for retaining drums at the rear is that a drum is more effective than a disc as a parking brake.

Railway tread brake

The brake shoe carries the brake block. The block was originally made of wood but is now usually cast iron. When the brake is applied, the shoe moves and presses the block against the tread of the wheel. As well as providing braking effort this also "scrubs" the wheel and keeps it clean. Tread brakes on passenger trains have now largely been superseded by disc brakes.

Bicycle rim brake

This comprises a pair of rectangular open boxes which are mounted on the brake calipers of a bicycle and that hold the brake blocks which rub on the rim of a bicycle wheel to slow the bicycle down or stop it.

Cataloguing

There are different systems for the cataloguing of brake shoes. The most frequently used system in Europe is the WVA numbering system.[1]

Brake pad

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Brake pads are a component of disk brakes used in automotive and other applications. Brake pads are steel backing plates with friction material bound to the surface that faces the disk brake rotor.

Function

Brake pads convert the kinetic energy of the car to thermal energy by friction. Two brake pads are contained in the brake caliper with their friction surfaces facing the rotor.[1] When the brakes are hydraulically applied, the caliper clamps or squeezes the two pads together into the spinning rotor to slow/stop the vehicle. When a brake pad is heated by contact with a rotor, it transfers small amounts of friction material to the disc, turning it dull gray. The brake pad and disc (both now with friction material), then "stick" to each other, providing the friction that stops the vehicle.
In disc brake applications, there are usually two brake pads per disc rotor, held in place and actuated by a caliper affixed to a wheel hub or suspension upright. Although almost all road-going vehicles have only two brake pads per caliper, racing calipers utilize up to six pads, with varying frictional properties in a staggered pattern for optimum performance. Depending on the properties of the material, disc wear rates may vary. The brake pads must usually be replaced regularly (depending on pad material), and most are equipped with a method of alerting the driver when this needs to take place. Some have a thin piece of soft metal that causes the brakes to squeal when the pads are too thin, while others have a soft metal tab embedded in the pad material that closes an electric circuit and lights a warning light when the brake pad gets thin. More expensive cars may use an electronic sensor.

Advantages of disc brakes

These brakes offer better stopping performance than comparable drum brakes, including resistance to "brake fade" caused by the overheating of brake components, and are able to recover quickly from immersion (wet brakes are less effective). Unlike a drum brake, the disc brake has no self-servo effect—the braking force is always proportional to the pressure placed on the braking pedal or lever—but many disc brake systems have servo assistance ("Brake Booster") to lessen the driver's pedal effort.[citation needed]

Laser shaping

Ordinary brake pads inherit vibration characteristics since the shape of the pad and contact of the caliper piston causes vibration that distorts the contact or the transfer of force to the rotor upon contact. The new laser cutting technology of the pad decreases the contact area and focuses on more force being distributed over a smaller amount of an area for more positive contact of the pad and rotor creating more efficient quality stopping.[citation needed]

Laser burnishing process

A precisely controlled laser beam is used to heat and condition the pad surface, eliminating the need for a traditional break-in period on the vehicle following installation.[citation needed]

IMI-sound insulator

Spreads out and absorbs heat and energy over a greater surface area for longer brake pad life and quieter performance.[citation needed]

Types

There are numerous types of brake pads, depending on the intended use of the vehicle, from very soft and aggressive (such as racing applications) and harder, more durable and less aggressive compounds. Most vehicle manufacturers recommend a specific compound of brake pad for their vehicle, but compounds can be changed (by either buying a different make of pad or upgrading to a performance pad in a manufacturer's range) according to personal tastes and driving styles. Care must always be taken when fitting non standard brake pads, as operating temperature ranges may vary, such as performance pads not braking efficiently when cold or standard pads fading under hard driving. In cars that suffer from excessive brake fade, the problem can be minimized by installing better quality and more aggressive brake pads.

Materials

Brake pad materials range from asbestos to organic or semi-metallic formulations. Each of these materials has proven to have advantages and disadvantages regarding environmental friendliness, wear, noise and stopping capability. Semi-metallic pads provide strength and conduct heat away from rotors but also generate noise and are abrasive enough to increase rotor wear.
Ceramic compounds and copper fibers in place of the semi-metallic pad's steel fibers provide high brake temperatures with less heat fade, generate less dust and wear on both the pads and rotors. They also provide much quieter braking because the ceramic compound helps dampen noise by generating a frequency beyond the human hearing range and use less metal (approximately 15% metal content by weight). Ceramic brake pads typically are suited for light-duty applications and not severe duty applications, medium duty trucks, etc.
There are environmental factors that govern the selection of brake pad materials. For example, recent legislation in Washington State and other states will limit the amount of copper that is allowed to be used in friction materials, to be eventually phased out to trace amounts. The legislation can be found in Washington State SSB 6557. Other materials like antimony compounds will be monitored as well.
Asbestos was widely used in pads for its heat resistance, but due to health risks has been replaced with alternative materials, such as mineral fibers, cellulose, aramid, PAN, chopped glass, steel, and copper fibers. Depending on material properties, disc wear rates vary. The properties that determine material wear involve trade-offs between performance and longevity. Newer pads can be made of exotic materials like ceramics, aramid fibres, and other plastics. Vehicles have different braking requirements. Friction materials offer application-specific formulas and designs. Brake pads with a higher coefficient of friction provide good braking with less brake pedal pressure requirement, but tend to lose efficiency at higher temperatures, increasing stopping distance. Brake pads with a smaller and constant coefficient of friction don’t lose efficiency at higher temperatures and are stable, but require higher brake pedal pressure.

Shoes

 
Shoes  

Footwear is an invention of necessity to protect us from the elements beneath. Over the years shoes have dramatically changed due to cultures and fashions. Footwear is under the influence of fashion.
When you purchase shoes the usual questions start emerging, what style? size? Is it well made? These questions are important, a pair of shoes can have an overall effect on a persons health and happiness. Not only pain and discomfort can be brought on by the wrong shoes but headaches, backaches and leg cramps.

How Many Miles Do You Walk In A Lifetime?
Approximately a person will walk 70,000 miles in a lifetime, so it is important to purchase the correct shoes.

The major importance is not to be tempted by the latest fashion, the may look good but are the comfortable.
" You can tell a person by the shoes they wear "

Just think of those different styles, shapes, constructions, decorations Fashion in expressed in different ways gender, age, economic strata and social echelon of its wearer. Fashion can facilitate or hinder comfort health and ease of movement. It reflects cultural ritual, morality and sexual liberation. It responds to foreign influences, political turmoil, economic stability and artistic sensibility. It is made by the latest scientific developments and technological innovations. It is influenced by popular culture and leading personalities. Everything that shapes our world affects and inspires fashion and by looking at historical fashion within the context of when it was made we can understand how it came about.
History Of The Shoe, Where did it start?
Shoes where first named by the Greeks and later the Romans, who provided the root for many of our present day footwear styles, including soccus, sandalium and muleus (sock, sandal and mule). During the late Roman (Byzantine) empire, Christian morality deemed it sinful to expose the body. St Clement of Alexandria in the third century AD Preached humility for woman who showed their toes. Byzantine footwear covered the feet and shoes replaced the sandals that both men and women had worn for centuries.
Fashion began to change around 1600 as the barriers in dress distinction between classes started to break down. It became a commodity that was traded throughout Europe, remaining elitist through consumption, quality and extravagance. The working classes adapted high fashion into simpler modes using humbler materials and were only restricted by cost and practicality.
By the middle of the seventeenth century France had become a beacon of style for all of Europe to emulate. The excesses of baroque were indulged under Louis XIV, and the fashions and arts of France, favoured by European nobility, spread throughout fashionable society. Suddenly there was an interest in high thin-heeled shoes, and by the 1760s English ladies had abandoned their sensible heels to take up the French curvaceous pompadour heel and later, in the 1770s, the Italian stiletto like heel.
   
Fashion and Our Trend  
Naomi Campbell in 1993 hit the headlines, when she took to the catwalk and fell wearing a pair of blue mock-croc platform shoes. Since then westwood sold about 300 pairs, a large potion of sales coming from museums and collectors.
   
Glossery  
A
Airport Friendly - A shoe that contains no metal of any sort, allowing the wearer to pass through airport metal detectors.

All Terrain Sandal - Any sandal that is meant for use in rafting, hiking, etc. Often waterproofed and with an all terrain outsole.

Ankle Wrap - Straps that are meant to be wrapped around and tied around the ankle for a stylish accent.

Apron Toe - A type of toe characterized by a large overlay that covers the front of the toe and has visible edges or stitching, to form a sort of "apron" on the front of the shoe.
B
Bicycle Toe - A type of toe characterized by two stitched straight line accents, so named because of their similarity to professional bicycling shoe detailing.

Blucher Toe - A type of toe characterized by a smooth, turned stitch border around the toe area, like an apron toe style in reverse.

Boat Shoe - A type of shoe originally meant to be worn aboard a boat, usually with a siped, non-slip outsole, often with side lacing details, almost always a casual shoe you can wear with or without socks.

Boot - Any footwear that rises to the ankle or higher, can be casual or dressy, practical or fashionable.

Boot Heel - Typically found on boots, this is a wide, stable type of heel that usually is not very high.

Bootie - A shoe that has the styling of a boot without the height, also called a shoe-boot or "shootie"

Brocade - A type of fabric, often with embroidered or embroidered-style elaborate designs, popular with Asian influenced looks.
C
Cap Toe - A type of toe style with a full toe overlay and a straight stitching line across the top part of the toe, often seen in dress shoes.

Casual After Sport - A type of casual shoe that's ideal for use after athletic activity, with sporty styling and comfort, but lacking an athletic shoe's technical features.

Cheerleading Shoe - A type of athletic shoe meant for competitive, high-impact cheerleading activity, often with switchable color accents to match team colors, and finger notches in the soles for use in acrobatics.

Chelsea Boot - A type of boot, usually ankle height, in a pull on style with elastic side panels. Popularized in England.

Cleats - Any traction enhancing spikes or nubs attached to the sole of an athletic shoe, often used in grass-based sports such as baseball, soccer, or golf to ensure sure footing.

ClimaCool - A venting and cooling system used by adidas brand footwear with flexible screened vents to keep feet cool.

Clog - A type of shoe, usually casual and comfortable, with an open or closed heel and a slip on style.

Column Heel - A type of women's high heel that's round and column-shaped.

Corporate Casual - A shoe that is clearly casual, but suitable for most "casual Friday" dress codes or relaxed corporate styles.

Crepe Sole - A type of sole characterized by a nubbly texture like crepe paper

Croc Embossed - Leather that has been embossed or stamped in a pattern simulating crocodile skin

Cross Training - Athletic shoes suitable for cross training activities, from running to aerobics to weight training
D
Distressed Leather - Leather that has been rubbed, scratched, or treated for a stylish effect

Driving Moc - A type of casual moccasin or slip on ideal for driving, with a flexible outsole, pedal-gripping sole, and a wraparound protected heel

Dual Density Midsole - Seen in running shoes, a midsole that employs two different densities of cushioning foam, with denser foam where the foot would normally tend to roll.
E
Elastic Gore - An elastic fabric panel inserted into shoes to provide stretch

Energy Return - In running and athletic shoes, it is the response after the foot strikes the ground, a sort of propulsion that helps maintain an effective "gait" or stride

Engineer Boot - Originally worn by the Army Corps of Engineers, it is a work style pull on boot characterized by instep and top straps

Espadrille - Any shoe that has woven rope or rope-look trim, usually in the sole area
F
Faux Leather - Simulated non-animal leather-like material, usually polyurethane

Fisherman Sandal - Type of sandal with woven or stitched vertical and horizontal straps, often with a closed toe

Fitness - Athletic shoes ideally suited for gym-style workouts

Flat Heel - Shoes with a very low or no heel height

Flip-Flop - A type of sandal, usually a thong, with a lightweight foam outsole that makes a "flip-flop" sound when you walk.

Footbed - the insole of the shoe, where the foot rests

Full Grain Leather - Leather that shows a natural texture or "grain"
G
Gait Control - In athletic running or walking shoes, a system of controlling the foot's movement within the running or walking step to prevent injury and fatigue

Gardening Clog - A type of footwear that is usually backless, rubber, and waterproof, ideal for gardening

Gore-Tex - An advanced, lightweight waterproof material, ideal as a lining
H
Haircalf - Natural calfskin material with a soft furry texture

Handle Drop - In handbags, the length measured between the top of the bag and the center point of the handle

Harness Boot - A type of boot characterized by straps across the instep and heel, usually joined by a ring detail

Herringbone Tweed - A type of tweed fabric with a jagged line pattern

Houndstooth Check - A type of pattern with a diagonal "tooth" checked design

Huarache - A type of woven sandal-like casual shoe, originating in Mexico and Central America
I
Insole - The part of the shoe that the foot rests upon, usually cushioned

Instep - The area of the foot between the toes and the ankle, or the top front part of a shoe
J
Jelly or Jellie - A type of soft rubbery material, often transparent or translucent

Jodhpur Boot - Also called a Chelsea Boot, an ankle height slip on boot with elastic side panels
K
Kitten Heel - A type of heel that is set forward, usually low height
L
Last - A block or form shaped like a human foot and used in making or repairing shoes

Light Hiking - Athletic shoes that are ideal for day hikes or "approach" hiking but are not ideal for long backpacking hikes or climbing

Lining - The material inside a shoe

Lucite - A type of clear hard plastic that is often used in dress shoes

Lug Sole - A sole with a heavy three dimensional traction pattern

Lycra/Neoprene - A blend of stretch fabric and neoprene rubber, ideal for a waterproof and sporty soft lining
M
Mary Jane - A type of women's shoe characterized by a strap across the instep

Mersey Boot - Also known as "Beatle Boots," dress boots with a zippered side and a slightly raised heel

Microfiber - A type of closely knit smooth fabric often used in shoes

Midsole - The part of the shoe between the very bottom and where the foot rests, often cushioned

Moc Toe - A type of toe design with a seam and stitching details, originally seen in moccasins

Moccasin - Possibly the earliest type of shoe, a slip on style with visible stitching, often with a soft leather bottom

Mod Style - Style characteristic of the "Mod" era in the 1960's, with bold, high contrast geometric patterns and pop-art details

Monk Strap - A type of shoe designed like an oxford, but with a strap closure across the instep rather than a lace up front closure

Motorcycle Boot - Boots ideal for riding a motorcycle, often with thick, durable soles

Mule - A closed toe shoe with no back
N
Nappa Leather - A type of leather characterized by its stretchy, soft, smooth texture

Negative Heel - Popular in comfort footwear, a type of footbed with a lowered heel area designed for more natural foot placement

Nubuck - A type of leather that has been "bucked" or sanded for a smooth texture with a slight nap
O
Orthotic - A full or partial insole specifically designed for comfort and support

Outsole - The very bottom of the shoe, the part that contacts the ground

Overlay - Detailing on a shoe made by layering material on top of other material
P
Patent Leather - A type of leather that has been varnished for a shiny finished

Peekaboo Toe - A type of closed toe with a small open panel allowing a glimpse of toe

Pinked - Detailing characterized by a sawtooth edge

Polyurethane - A type of manmade material that can be made to have the look and feel of leather

Pronation - The inward rolling of the foot during running or walking, potentially a source of injury

PU - The commonly used abbreviation for polyurethane

Pumps - Women's dress shoes, usually slip on, often with enclosed toe and sides
Q Quarter Panel - The sides of the shoe from the heel to the toe
R
Retro - Referring to popular style of the past

Ruched - A type of detailing characterized by gathered or pleated material with stitching accents

Running - Cushioning - Running shoes characterized by a high degree of cushioning in the insole and midsole, designed for runners in need of maximum shock absorption

Running - Stability - Running shoes characterized by a high degree of stabilizing elements, designed for runners in need of gait control

Running - Supportive Cushioning - Running shoes with a combination of cushioning and stabilized support, designed for runners needing both

Running - Trail - Running shoes designed for running both on and off road, with increased stability and traction for irregular terrain
S
Saddle Shoes - Shoes with a contrast colored instep overlay or "saddle," usually found on golf shoes or retro styles

Scalloped - A type of detailing characterized by round wavy edges

Sculpted Heel - A type of high heel molded in one piece, usually out of high-impact plastic

Siped - A type of outsole with narrow grooves or channels, often found in boat shoes

Slingback - Shoes that are backless with a rear strap that goes around the upper heel, usually with a buckle or elastic panel

Slouched - Shoes with a baggy, gathered design that "slouches" down, usually found in boots

Snip Toe - A type of toe that is tapered, with a squared front as if "snipped"

Sole - Another word for outsole, the bottom part of the shoe

Spandex/Neoprene - A combination of stretchy Spandex fabric and soft neoprene rubber, a soft and waterproof material usually used as a lining

Stacked Heel - A heel that has horizontal lines, indicating that it is made up of stacked layers of leather, or a heel with that appearance

Stiletto - A high, tapered, narrow heel, also called a "spike" heel, named for a type of slim knife

Strappy Sandal - A sandal characterized by a multiple strap design

Studio-Aerobic - Athletic shoes ideally meant for aerobics and other studio fitness activities

Suede - Leather that has been sanded or roughed to produce a surface with a soft texture or "nap"

Sueded Fabric - Fabric that has been given a soft nap to simulate the feel of suede leather

Supination - The rolling of the foot outward to the side while running or walking, can lead to serious injury
T Tailored - Characterized by a fitted, precise design that follows the contours of the foot

Thong Sandal - Any sandal that has material that fits between the toes, especially the big and second toes

Toe Ridge - A horizontal ridge added into the footbed of some sandals to anchor and provide support and cushioning for the toes

Toe Thong Post - The part of a thong sandal that actually fits between the toes

Trubuck - An fabric with a durable but soft texture that simulates nubuck leather

T-Strap - A type of shoe with a single vertical strap linking the toe and ankle/heel areas

Turf Cleats - Permanent or removable plastic or rubber cleats on athletic shoes

Twill Fabric - A woven fabric material characterized by a smooth surface and durable wear
U Upper - The part of the shoe that covers the top part of the foot, from heel to toe
V Vachetta Leather - A type of soft cow leather

Vamp - The front center part of a shoe's upper

Vegetable Tanned - Leather that has been tanned using a vegetable process, ideal for those with allergies to chromium or other tanning chemicals
W Water Sports - Any sports such as rafting, kayaking, surfing, etc. that require footwear that is waterproof, quick drying, with all terrain traction

Western - Roper - A type of Western boot characterized by a lower shaft, flared top, and medium round toe

Wing Tip - A type of shoe with overlays and stitched, perforated trim, usually a dress style

Work - Non-Safety - Work boots that do not have a steel safety toe

Work - Safety - Work boots that have a steel safety toe and conform to ANSI safety standards specified

Wrestling Shoe - Athletic shoes ideal for Greco-Roman wrestling, usually with a flexible split outsole and covered laces to conform to rules
   

The Political History of Shoes

The Political History of Shoes


Shoes. We all have some. We rarely think about them. But shoes are political. Charities buy poor kids shoes in every city. The type of shoes you have, and how many, are a sign of social status. (Remember Marcos' 1500 pairs of shoes?!) Women have endured foot binding and high heels. Some people wear wooden shoes, some wear sandals, some wear fur and skin boots. There are clown shoes, snow shoes, tap dancing shoes, Earth Shoes, and there are also shoe museums all over the world, including Seattle. Shoes have changed over the years due to new materials, such as rubber, becoming available, and due to design changes, such as the left and right shoes having different patterns. Studies of one Ice Age mummy suggested he did not travel further than 40 miles from home, and his shoes reflected that, both in utility and materials used. Even the ways we attach our shoes are changing. Learning how to tie shoelaces has been superceded by velcro shoe closures for younger kids.
It is assumed that shoes were one of the first things humans made, to protect their feet from hot sand, sharp rocks, etc. while they traveled looking for food. And there are cultures that are still wearing sandal designs very similar to those worn by their ancient ancestors. Ancient Egyptian sandals had class distinctions. A commoner's sandal was plain, but nobility's sandals had a long curved horn protruding from the toe, much as we see characterizing "elf" shoes today. Sandals are still the predominant shoe worn in most warm climates. The oldest pair of shoes we have uncovered on Earth so far are a 10,000 year old pair of sandals, made out of sagebrush, housed at the University of Oregon's Museum of Natural and Cultural History. As a kid growing up in Southern California, I rarely wore shoes and if I did, they were sandals. When I was about 6 years old, I became friends with a girl who had just come from Hawaii. She said kids did not have to wear shoes to school in Hawaii (this was the early 1960's). I was in awe of that concept. And beyond optional shoes, in East India, in the 16th century, only the elite were allowed to wear shoes.
As always, laws tell us a lot about the evolution of shoes and cultural attachments to them over time. Around the 3rd century A.D., common Roman women were banned from adoring their footwear with gold or jewels. The Middle Ages were heavy on footwear and clothing regulations, the function of which was to enforce class distinctions. In the 14th century, Edward III made laws about which fabrics different sectors of society could wear. By the 15th century, laws and mores about shoe styles and lengths were implemented in England. If you were a commoner, your shoes could extend no more than 2 inches past your toes. If you were a merchant, your shoes could not be longer than 6 1/2 inches past your toes. If you were a gentleman, your shoes could extend 12 inches past your toes, and if you were a nobleman, your shoes were allowed to extend 24 inches past your toes! Talk about absolutely useless shoes! The extended toes on these shoes were pointed, and we will later see this pointy toed shoe reappear in American 20th century fashion.
That uselessness of shoes with 24 inch pointed tips reminds me of the white shoes that were so common in the 1960-70's, and can still be seen on some old timers today. Jim Page, a Seattle busker, wrote a song back in the 1970's that summed this phenomenon up succinctly: "...Now some folks work real hard for their pay, some don't do nothin', but they get paid anyway, some people don't mind gettin' dirt on their hands, some folks run just as fast as they can, and they would just naturally choose, those pure white ultra bright sanitary shoes...you got your hair all plastered with Palm Palmade, you got underarm deodorant and aftershave, you got to watch real careful where you walk on the street, so as not to insult your elite feet, 'cause you surely would hate to lose those pure white ultra bright sanitary shoes...Now you can wear 'em high, you can wear 'em low, but they really look good on the patio, and if you really want to make that big advance, get a white belt, and maroon pants, then you know you've paid your dues, wearing pure white ultra bright sanitary shoes...Now you can't take out the garbage or sweep the floor, you can hardly go to the grocery store, you can't pump gas or fix a flat, you can't do anything dressed like that, but that's the whole idea behind the ruse, of wearing pure white ultra bright sanitary shoes. Now I been down on the bottom, lookin' up at the street, some people you can tell just by lookin' at their feet. Some'll step on you last, some'll step on you first, but the white ones, they always get you the worst, and it gives you the underfoot blues, to get stepped on, by pure white ultra bright sanitary shoes."
Speaking of shoes and buskers (street performing), I pulled into Carmel, Ca. one day in 1983 in my school bus, and decided to try to busk their main drag. I set up and began to busk, and had a small crowd gathering when about 3 songs into the set, a cop showed up and told me it was illegal to play music for money in Carmel city limits. He said Carmel had some wacky laws, such as no jukeboxes were allowed that charged money, you are not allowed to sit on fire hydrants, and women were not allowed to wear heels over 6 inches. And apparently laws regulating the height of women's shoes, date back to at least the 15th century in Venice. What do shoes mean? Why would certain shoes be banned for some and not others? That is the politics of shoes. In Sienna during the 15th century, it was illegal for anyone other than prostitutes to wear flat shoes or slippers in public.
Laws were enacted in France during the 16th century regulating shoe tip length. Princes, again, could wear 24 inch tips, and gentlemen, 6 inch tips. (I am chuckling thinking of the inherent penis size comparisons these protruding shoe tip lengths must have generated in their time). Akin to the sheer impracticality of 24 inch shoe tips, we see pedestals and high heels, and their legal regulation, for women. In the 18th century, it was supposedly a crime and grounds for marriage annulment if a woman "tricked" a man into marrying her by wearing high heels, whatever that could possibly mean!
In Venice in the 16th century, 13 inch shoes that put women on pedestals, called "chopines," were in vogue. And Queen Catherine de Medici was said to have worn "chopine" shoes in the Renaissance, because she was short and wanted to appear larger. Unlike the modern high heel shoe, where a woman has part of her foot on the ground and another part of her foot unnaturally raised, chopines simply put the entire shoe atop a walking pedestal. The utility of wobbling around on 13 inch pedestals is questionable, but if the utility was to show your social status rather than to walk, then they served their purpose just fine.
In the 16th century, women were balancing on all kinds of weird contraptions. An elevated "shoe protector" resembling low stilts had women tripping as they tried to walk, and by the 18th century, women were wearing elaborate metal "protectors" for their elegant shoes, to keep them from getting dirty by touching the ground. These shoe protectors give new meaning to the concept of allowing women to stand on their own two feet!
Much of shoe elitism has to do with class distinctions. Before the French Revolution, large, bare feet were negatively associated with poor peasants and workers. It was the elite who could afford to have small limbs and tiny feet. And wealthy children were forced to wear shoes to keep their feet smaller, just as China's foot binding for women. In China, from the 10th century to the 20th century, women's feet were bound and literally deformed, and women left crippled, for this "feminine" fashion. By age 3, a girl would have all but her first toe broken, then her feet were bound tightly with cloth to keep her feet from growing any bigger than 4 inches. Rich women had their feet bound in China for over 1,000 years as a sign of wealth and prestige. These little deformed feet were highly eroticized.
This eliteness of small feet became something women latched onto as a symbol of femininity, of privilege, and also of weakness and dependence on servants, and a Victorian type of female submission that indicated wealth. This feigned weakness and helpless dependence upon others' servitude are considered very sexy traits in women, even in mainstream American culture today. Look at Paris Hilton. As weird as it sounds, small feet on women are a reassuring symbol to men that they are in charge, and thus men support the continual eroticism of small feet on women to date, as a symbol of female dependence upon men, is my take on it.
Working class folks in the U.S. during the Civil War often went barefoot from spring to fall. They usually had shoes for school and church, but they did not wear them when they did not need to. There are reports of many folks who never got a pair of their own shoes until their teens, before commercial shoes were available. But with the industrialization of shoe making, more people were able to afford shoes in the mid-1800's. And for the first time, different patterns of the right and left shoes were standardized. To compete with other shoemakers, styles emerged, along with pointy toed shoes, which crammed feet into unnatural shapes for fashion. In past centuries, those 12+ inch pointy shoes had the point start after the tip of the toes. In current shoes, though, the point starts well into the toes, compressing toes into 1/2-1/3 the space they naturally take up. Even today, many women have toes that are crumpled together, with one toe laying upon another, due to pointed toes and raised heels that jam the feet into the pointy toe area, with no room.
By the 1930's, women's feet were finally experiencing some liberation. Women began to quit wanting to emulate queens and royalty and instead wanted to be more athletic. The saddle shoe became popular, considered clunky and big, yet rebellious, and finally women were allowed toe room and a flat shoe. Supposedly the popularity of the dance the jitterbug played into the popularity of the saddle shoe as it was hard to do the energetic dance in heels. Yet today, it is still reported that women have 4 times more foot problems than men, due solely to high heels.
It is funny that we see foot laws reemerge in the United States in the 1960's over the regulation of barefootedness, in response to hippies. And in recent years, schools all over America have begun to enforce strict dress codes, that include things such as Chicago's banning of the red/black version of Air Jordan shoes on campus, describing the wearing of these shoes as "disruptive." In Florida, a middle school banned two-toned shoes, but solid green shoes are not allowed either, and heels cannot be over 1 inch in height. Some U.S. schools currently ban black shoes, which is interesting when you juxtapose the idea that women are not allowed to wear white shoes in Afghanistan as per a 1999 report. James reports that for some unknown reason, Los Angeles has banned wearing condoms on your feet in some of its public schools. He also says that it is illegal to attach mirrors to your feet in Australia, to stop men from looking up women's skirts.
Shoes and feet have long been associated with good luck, even horse shoes. Babies who came out feet first are considered magical in some cultures. And it is thought the concept of shoes as good luck may be related to the concept that the rich had nice shoes as a class privilege, so people used shoes as a token of wealth and luck. (Oddly, I have an old gold charm a woman from Turkey gave me decades ago, and I always wondered why a shoe?!) One old custom places an old shoe outside your door before leaving on a long journey for good luck. Throwing shoes after someone leaving on travels was also a good luck symbol, which is related not only to throwing confetti and rice at weddings, but also tying shoes to a car's bumper as the couple drives away. One ritual says a shoe thrown over a house will land pointing in the direction fate will take you in shortly. And wishcraft tells folks to put gems in their shoes to find treasure. In Spain, women would throw their shoes at Matadors after bullfights to get their attention.
It is said to be good luck if shoes fall onto their soles. Tripping over a boot is considered bad luck. Some believe you need to put your right shoe on first and take it off first, before the left foot, to avoid bad luck. Unless it is Friday, and you do it unintentionally, and then it means you are sure to get into a fight. One tradition says putting your left foot on the ground first in the morning is bad luck. Some say walking around with one shoe on and one off will bring bad luck for a year. Or that putting your shoes on the wrong feet by accident foretells an accident to the feet will occur soon. Some say not to place your shoes higher than your head while in bed, and that tying shoes together and handing them on a nail is bad luck. It is a bad omen for actors to put shoes on a chair in their dressing room.
It was long thought that you inherited the karma and life energy of those whose shoes you wore, and thus it was considered bad luck to accept someone's old shoes, as you may inherit their troubles and ills as well. This "wives' tale" may have been created to discourage borrowing others' shoes, when they were so precious. But it was also thought you could inherit good karma and good luck through a successful person's shoes too. The phrase "following in your father's footsteps" was based on the practice of bequeathing your shoes to your kin upon death, as shoes were expensive, and your son literally walking in your shoes, leaving the same footprints. Another wives' tale that may have utility was putting red pepper in shoes during winter to keep feet warm. Shoes given as a Christmas gift is considered a bad luck omen, and giving shoes to a friend is said to predict them walking away from you. Sticking a hairpin in a shoe is said to guarantee meeting a good friend. And hanging old shoes up as tokens of good luck on the roof of a house is common. An old shoe is considered good luck charm. On Friday the 13th, superstitious people only wear old shoes to thwart off evil. Old shoes are also burned to start life anew.
Shoelaces took a while to catch on as new fangled things, and were also considered effeminate, so men resisted them at first. But as time wore on, rituals involving shoelaces evolved. It is said if your shoelace comes undone, without being caught on anything to pull it out, your true love is thinking about you at that moment. A broken shoelace came to represent bad luck. And if a right shoe lace came undone, it was good luck, and if the left one came undone, it foresaw bad luck. And if you want the coolest shoelace patterns in town, check this site out (http://www.fieggen.com/shoelace/lacingmethods.htm) for more lacing methods than you could ever need!
In Japan, street shoes are left at the door so dirt does not get tracked into the house from the street. Etiquette about which slippers can be worn where, such as slippers are not worn in rooms with tatami mats, and toilet slippers are not worn outside the bathroom, are things Americans would need to be taught. I hear even in Japanese grade schools, there is a room for street shoes, and the kids wear a special slip-on shoe that stays at school, which is very different than American culture where our street shoes go from our schools to the streets and then through our kitchens, bathrooms, and bedrooms.
The most expensive shoes sold yet to date are one of the pairs of ruby red slippers Judy Garland wore in the Wizard of Oz. Neil Armstrong's boots that he walked on the moon with in 1969 are not in the Smithsonian, but rather they dumped them in space before returning home, afraid they might be contaminated. There is an old woman who lives in a shoe with too many children, and Wynken, Blynken and Nod sailed off in a wooden shoe. Many sayings include shoes, such as "walk a mile in my shoes," and "if the shoe fits, wear it." There is a shoe as a marker in the board game Monopoly. Songs refer to shoes too. In my lifetime, "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'" is probably the most well known shoe song. Elvis' "Don't Step On My Blue Suede Shoes" also ranks high as a familiar pop song about shoes.

High Quality Professional Clown Shoes
You can find an odd assortment of shoe things online. I found a pair of "savvy bachelor mop slippers" (http://www.prankplace.com/slippers.htm) so you can clean the floor as you walk around the house! Those are much more practical than high heels! You can join the national non-profit "odd shoe exchange" (www.oddshoe.org) where people with two different sized feet can trade single shoes with one anther. You can order your own personalized high quality clown shoes (http://www.clownsoport.com/FAQNew.htm) or make your own snowshoes (http://www.turtletrack.org/Issues03/Co03082003/CO_03082003_YoungChippewa.htm). You can buy vegetarian shoes (http://www.vegetarian-shoes.co.uk/ - vegetarian shoes) or make your own rubber tire shoes (http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node=How%20to%20make%20a%20serviceable%20pair%20of%20shoes%20out%20of%20a%20rubber%20tire) or sandals (http://www.hollowtop.com/sandals.htm). Make your own elaborate moccasins (http://jumaka.com/moccasins/MakingMoccasins/MoccasinInstructions.htm) or make simple one piece soft sole moccasins, with a center seam (http://www.nativetech.org/clothing/moccasin/mocinstr.html). Learn about other cultures through their shoes! Look at your own shoes. What can people tell about you just by looking at your feet?

Shoe Care

Shoe care is significant for the look of your shoes and so for the first impression a person gets about you.
It isn’t just enough to brush your shoes, shoe care is more. The following items I will deal with in this article:
  1. How to buy and wear shoes
  2. How to storage shoes
    1. What’s a shoetree and how it should be used
    2. When you’re travelling
  3. How to put on shoes and how to remove them
  4. Basic shoe care
  5. Real shoe shine
    1. Special cases
      1. Cordovan shoes
      2. Fabric shoes
      3. Suede or nubuck shoes
      4. Wet shoes
  6. How to find a shoe repair shop

1. How to buy and wear shoes

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Well, to have less problems with the shoe care as possible it’s important to buy the right shoes. Leather  shoes adjust themselves to ones feet. If you buy too tight shoes the leather will stretch out and the shoes won’t look nice anymore. A good shoe should fit perfectly.
Another important aspect about buying shoes is the quality. If you buy shoes for $ 50 you get shoes for this amount. You can imagine how good the quality will be. Good shoes start from $ 200 and up. For some men it might be more then they usually spend on shoes, but high quality shoes have a longer lifetime. With the right shoe care you can wear your high quality shoes in ten, fifteen or even twenty years. You’ll even think they became more beautiful over the years because of the patina. 

For this reason you should wear your shoes carefully. Try not to get them wet, and really, really important: Make a pause for your shoes. Don’t wear the same pair two or even more days in a row. Change the shoes every day. One day shoe pair A, the next B, then again A and so on. Leather needs this time to dry. Whether it’s hot or not, through your feet’s transpiration the leather has to absorb this moisture. If you wear the same shoes day after day the leather have no chance to release this and it will begin to smell and look bad.
The main two things are: Buy high quality shoes and don’t wear your shoes for two days in a row.
Another advice: Buy shoes in the evening. Feet are by the end of the day bigger than in the morning.

2. How to storage shoes

The second part of our shoe care article is about how to storage shoes. Shoes should be stored somewhere the leather can breath and they’re not affected by sun or heat. A shoe rack in the corridor should do it. If you’re not wearing a pair very often, a clear shoe box may be a stylish alternative. Your shoes are safe and you can easily look at them.

2.1 What’s a shoetree and how it should be used

The most important thing about storage is the shoetree. Every time you get home put a shoetree in your shoes. It will keep your shoes in form and also absorb the moisture. Especially for moist leather shoes that are shrinking, while they’re drying, shoetrees are really important.
The best material for a shoetree is of course wood. Plastic material for example cannot absorb the moisture.

2.2 When you’re travelling

When you’re travelling you should think of a good possibility to storage your shoes. For example if you’re on a business travel for a week you need more than one pair of shoes. Or maybe because you want to play golf with your business partner or something like that.
If you buy high quality shoes you always get a shoe bag with them. If not, you should buy some because it’s the best way to take your shoes on a travel.

3. How to put on shoes and how to remove them

To put shoes on or to remove them use always a shoehorn. It makes it a lot easier to slip in the shoe and spares the shoe from damage. Most shoehorns are made of plastic, but there are also great one made of wood or metal.
For boots there are special longer shoehorns.

4. Basic shoe care

For the basic shoe care you’ll just need a brush, a cloth, some warm water and few minutes. Start brushing the leather only with warm water. Don’t use soap or other special substances. Soap makes leather fragile.
After you’ve removed rude dirt use the rag again in connection with the warm water to remove the fine dirt. Rub a little till you are satisfied with the cleanliness of the shoe.
You’re done. Do it periodically. Now, let’s start with the real thing.

5. Real shoe shine

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picture by burgol.de

To start make sure you’re wearing old clothes that can get dirty. Prepare the place where you are going to clean and polish your shoes and put down newspaper.
You can leave the shoetree in the shoe, it will make the procedure even more easier. Remove the shoe laces. They shouldn’t get in contact with the shoe polish.
First, remove all the rude dirt with a dry brush or a cloth. Then you should use the cloth and some warm water to get rid of the dust and fine dirt. Don’t forget the heel and sole.
Now it’s time to use shoe polish. Polish moisturizes, makes the leather flexible. The colour of the polish should be the same one as of the leather. If you’re not sure if the colour is right ask the local shoe repair person. He can give use you also some advice which brand is good and which you shouldn’t even try.
Lay the polish very thin on your shoe. Every care product should be used very sparely. Don’t forget, less is more.
Apply the polish with a fine cloth or a very fine brush, for example a horsehair brush, carefully over the leather. It’s recommended to start with the heel, going to the toe and on the other side back to the heel. Polish in circular motion. A trick is to use hot water to keep the polish soft, so it can be soaked in more easily.
After the first shoe is ready, let the polish soak in and do the second.
For a spit shine drop one or two drops clean water on the shoe when you’re polishing. Just don’t use spit. It’s often quite aggressive and can destroy the patina, especially if you like to drink coffee, tee or love candy.
After the polish let the shoes some time to dry and then buff them with a horsehair brush and a dry cloth till they have a nice shine.

5.1 Cordovan shoes

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picture by burgol.de

For shoes made of cordovan leather you shouldn’t use shoe polish because it leaves often a white film on the leather. Use instead special cordovan colour paste wax polish.

5.2 Fabric shoes

Fabric shoes can be easily cleaned with a special spray fabric cleaner. After the cleaner is dry just brush it off.

5.3 Suede or nubuck shoes

These kinds of leather are extremely sensitive. To clean shoes and boots made of suede or nubuck you should use just special for this leather designed products. Ask in a shoe repair shop for advice. To remove stains on suede footwear you can use a suede cleaning block. After using the cleaning block you can use a soft suede brush. That’s a special brass-bristle brush.
To repel the water and stains from the shoes you should also use a protective non-silicon finish spray.

5-4 Wet Shoes

Wet shoes should immediately been dried. Therefore stuff them with paper towels and let them dry at room temperature. Don’t put them near a heater. Direct heat isn’t good for the leather.

6. How to find a shoe repair shop

Sometimes your shoes need to be repaired. The first choice is always the fabricator of your shoes. If he doesn’t offer a repair services or if it would take too long you should contact a shoe repair shop. How to find one? Well, just use the yellow pages or the internet. Search for Boots & Shoes Repair. It’s always clever to make a short phone call to make sure they do the kind of work you need, before you drive there.
The Foot Practice is a private podiatry provider set up by Australian podiatrist Adam Jorgensen. The team consists of some of the most qualified and experienced Podiatrists in Singapore from Australia, Singapore and the United Kingdom.
Our aim is to provide the highest quality Podiatry service to all our patients.
The Foot Practice currently runs clinics everyday from these locations, call us to book your appointment:
City Osteopathy @ 80 Robinson Road

Currently we are the only podiatry service in the CBD. We are perfectly positioned to provide our high quality podiatry service just minutes from your office.
City Osteopathy Centre
80 Robinson Road, #17-03
Singapore 068898
Tel : 6222 2451
Monday – Friday: 8am – 8pm
Podiatry Clinic Hours:
Monday – Friday: 5pm – 8pm

The Osteopathic Centre
@ Siglap Drive

It gives us great pleasure to be able to offer Podiatry services in the East coast area. We are currently running two clinic sessions from the Osteopathic Centre; Tuesday mornings and Friday afternoons.
The Osteopathic Centre
#01-02 Bowmont Centre
20 Siglap Drive,
Singapore 456192
Tel: 64467236
Monday – Friday: 8.30am – 5.30pm
Podiatry Clinic Hours:
Tuesday: 8.30am – 12.30pm
Friday: 2pm – 5pm
The Foot Practice @ Singapore Sports Medicine Centre
The Singapore Sports Medicine Centre  is a sports focused medical practice with an experienced team of sports health professionals.  Access to sports doctors, physios, exercise specialists and masseurs provides athletes with comprehensive management of all their sports injuries.
Singapore Sports Medicine Centre
#08-08 Novena Medical Centre
10 Sinaran Drive, Singapore 307506
Tel: 6737 1000 / 9437 1000
The Foot Practice @ Body with Soul
Body with Soul at Rochester Park is a new concept in healthcare.  The family medical centre with a team of doctors and allied health professionals provides for all your family’s healthcare needs in an evironment of peace and relaxation.
Body with Soul
44/45 Rochester Park
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Tel:  6779 0660
Clinic Hours:
Monday to Friday – 9am to 7pm
Saturday – 9am to 1pm

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BRAS, BOOTS AND BIKES

New Zealanders let it all hang out - on rural fences. They display vast collections of used shoes, bras, bicycles, and even skins of feral pigs, on roadside fences that have become tourist attractions. In many parts of the US and a few in Canada, old shoes decorate trees instead of fences.
We first learned about this strange craze when we read a story headed Pig-skin fence turning holidaymakers' heads in the New Zealand Herald. It said that about 30 skins of wild pigs draped along a fence at Tahora, between Stratford and Taumarunui, was raising the eyebrows of travellers along the North Island's Forgotten World Highway.
Bruce Herbert, owner of the nearby Bushlands Holiday Park, said the skins began appearing about a month earlier. "It's local pig hunters showing off their pig hunting skills," he said. New skins were often added, as many as five or six in a single day.
It's unlikely that the skins will suffer the same fate as the 200 bras ripped off in broad daylight from a South Island fence.
Reporting their disappearance, Dave Smith wrote in the Otago Daily Times: "CARDRONA. Brazen brassiere bandits have uplifted one of the Cardrona Valley's tourism icons. More than 200 bras, right down to the last D cup, have been snipped off the bra fence, leaving just posts, wire and rabbit netting.
"Waiorau Snow Farm owner John Lee was alerted to the undergarment theft just hours after it happened. Yesterday, Mr Lee could only stand and stare at bare fence wires and ponder who might have done the dastardly deed."
Lee posted a $500 reward for information leading to the culprits. He said most of the bras had been left by passing travellers, some from as far away as Germany, the United States and Israel. A visiting American minister had once blessed the fence.
Loss of the bras didn't worry Lee, because 280 more garments had been hung on the fence, "from functional sports models to enticing lace evening wear."
Returning to the North Island, near New Plymouth a bike fence forms the frontage for The Missing Leg backpacker's hostel in Egmont Village. That too has attracted the attention of thieves.
"Fence owner Brian Garrett says he's lost 30 bikes over the 12 months the fence has been up, with some bold thieves stealing them in broad daylight," says a Taranaki TV website.
In the South Island, a fence near the Rakaia Gorge, on the road to Christchurch, displays hundreds of pairs of discarded shoes. "We'd backed to the road verge to inspect and photograph it," says the author of a picture-story posted by justtourpictures.com. "We were shortly joined by three more cars and a tour bus.
"The story has it a local farmer found a pair of shoes, possibly dropped from a passing car and hung them on his fence in case the owner returned for them. Some wag thought this amusing and added further old shoes to the fence. Others followed suit, and the fence now bows under the weight of hundreds of pairs of old footwear."
Just East of Burke's Pass in South Canterbury (en route to Queenstown from Christchurch) is a growing phenomenon on a farmer's fence, the Shoe Fence. Over 1000 (well, 1182 at last count) shoes, sandals, ski boots, gumboots and flippers are strung along a good old 8 strand fence. It all started so they say when a pair of moccasins were left for a shearer as he had left his behind.
- Message from Ralph Davies, posted by KiwiNews.com
Americans prefer to use their old shoes to decorate not fences, but trees. "Shoe trees may be the greatest embodiment of the American spirit you can find on the highway (free of admission charge, anyway)," says Roadside America.
"A shoe tree starts with one dreamer tossing his or her footwear-of-old high into the sky, to catch on an out-of-reach branch. It usually ends there, unseen and neglected by others. But on rare occasions, that first pair of shoes triggers a shoe tossing cascade.
"Soon, teens are gathering up their old Adidas and Sauconys, families are driving out after church with Dad's Reeboks and grandma's Keds. The shoe tree blooms with polymer beauty. A work of art like this may last for generations, tracing our history by our sneakers... as long as the tree doesn't die.
"On Highway 50 near Middle Gate, Nevada, a lone cottonwood stands, clotted with hundreds of shoes. One tipster tells us the first pair was thrown during a wedding night argument by a young couple; later, their children's shoes were added to the bough. Whatever its origins, the tree now seems to suck up all the discarded footwear in the county.
"Another lone shoe tree is reported south of Alturas, California... The tree features scores of sneaker pairs dangling from branches, a strange ritual by bored locals. Not a fully developed shoe tree, but far from anywhere. A shrunken old desert tree near Vidal, California... bears both shoes and a variety of shirts."
If you want to read about and see photos of many other US shoe trees, visit Roadside America's excellent website.

Riding past the 'bra fence' was a bizarre and surreal experience. I was incredulous as to why someone would pin their bra to a roadside fence and who started it all? Anyway, as you can see from the news article below, they are all gone now. No doubt though, those wacky Kiwis will start up another someplace else. All I can say is there are some big women swinging low right now........


Bold as bras . . . ripped off in broad daylight
By Dave Smith Otago Daily Times
Cardrona: Brazen brassiere bandits have uplifted one of the Cardrona Valley's tourism icons.
More than 200 bras, right down to the last D cup, have been snipped off the bra fence, leaving just posts, wire and rabbit netting.
Waiorau Snow Farm owner John Lee was alerted to the undergarment theft just hours after it happened.
Yesterday, Mr Lee could only stand and stare at bare fence wires and ponder who might have done the dastardly deed.
He suspected the bras had been stolen between 8am and 10am yesterday, as snow farm staff had seen them there in the morning.
Whoever took the bras may have a short-lived freedom, as Mr Lee has posted a $500 reward for information leading to the culprits.
"I will donate $500 towards the Cure Kids cause," he said.
Earlier this year, the fence had been blessed by a visiting American minister.
Bras had been appearing on the fence from just after Christmas until February, when about 130 disappeared.
Mr Lee was unperturbed as more bras were hung on the fence, reaching about 280 bras, from functional sports models to enticing lace evening wear.
There had been the occasional theft, but nothing untoward.
Since the bras first appeared, Mr Lee estimated he had given more than 80 radio, television, newspaper and magazine interviews to media around the globe.
Most of the bras had been left by passing travellers but many had arrived in the mail from places like Napier and Timaru, Colorado, Germany, the United States and Israel.
"Never anything from the cities like Auckland or Wellington," he quipped. "I had a lovely green one there from Germany.
"Whoever did this has been pretty determined. They have pulled off the rabbit netting to get to them."
Not that the bras would be of much use, as the thieves had left behind at least one of the shoulder straps.
Wanaka police have been notified of the disappearance.
roadsign

Shoe TreesSan Diego - Balboa Park shoe tree.

Shoe Trees may be the greatest embodiment of the American Spirit you can find on the highway (free of admission charge, anyway). While cultural anthropologists trumpet the aggregated populist statement of the gum tree or the gob rock, we believe Shoe Trees soar to greater heights.
A shoe tree starts with one dreamer, tossing his or her footwear-of-old high into the sky, to catch on an out-of-reach branch. It usually end there, unseen and neglected by others. But on rare occasions, that first pair of shoes triggers a shoe tossing cascade. Soon, teens are gathering up their old Adidas and Sauconys, families are driving out after church with Dad's Reeboks and grandma's Keds. Many inscribe messages on the sneakers in permanent marker -- greetings, love poems and life accomplishments.
The shoe tree blooms with polymer beauty. A work of art like this may last for generations, tracing our history by our sneakers . . . as long as the tree doesn't die.
Shoe TreeOn Highway 50 near Middlegate, Nevada, a lone cottonwood stands, clotted with hundreds of shoes. One tipster tells us the first pair was thrown during a wedding night argument by a young couple; later, their children's shoes were added to the bough. Whatever its origins, the tree now seems to suck up all the discarded footwear in the county.
The original Mud Flat Shoe Tree south of Altura, California was cut down in 1993, but second generation Shoe Trees sprouted along Highway 395. One of them, the Ravendale Shoe Tree (photo left), features scores of sneaker pairs dangling from branches, a strange ritual by bored locals. Not a fully developed shoe tree, but far from anywhere.
The Shoe Tree in Salem, Michigan even has a legend involving a serial killer and a quantity of small children dispatched for their footwear.
A shrunken old desert tree near Vidal, California , on Hwy 62 northest of the junction with Route 177, bore both shoes and a variety of shirts -- until some maniac burned it down in 2004.

Beaver's shoe tree.Case Study: The Great Beaver Shoe Tree

The Shoe Tree in Beaver, Arkansas was on the road to Beaver Dam, a few miles from Dinosaur World. It was mysteriously chosen, one of many thousands of trees and woods lining an otherwise featureless highway. Hundreds of old sneakers and running shoes dangled, some over 30 feet off the ground. Why this particular tree instead of its scores of flanking arboreal brethren?
There was a dirt shoulder where tourists and contributors could pull off. Many of the shoes had names and messages scrawled on them in magic marker. Closer inspection revealed that shoes had started to spread to branches on adjacent trees, like sneaker kudzu. Eventually, this whole stretch of road might have been choked with shoe trees.
In 2000, disaster struck. A wind storm felled the Great Beaver Shoe Tree -- perhaps aided by the unnatural burden of hundreds of waterlogged hangers-on. The road department hauled off the branches and fallen footwear, and the mighty loss could be felt across all of Shoetreedom...
Beaver's shoe tree.But something magical happened. In subsequent months, locals and visitors continued to bring their cast-offs, heaving into the trees surrounding the gap. A few trees contended as replacements for the Great Shoe Tree.
Then some people, recently arrived and living in fancy log cabins nearby, decided they didn't like the attention to their stretch of road. Persons unknown butchered the offending limbs from the trees, wood and rubber and laces tumbling in a shower of horror.
At last report, the shoe trees of Beaver had been severely diminished.
But others flourish in gentler communities. More have been sighted in Nordman, Idaho; Milltown, Indiana; Hodgdon, Maine; Atlanta and Owosso, Michigan; Lyndonville, New York; and elsewhere.
Tell us about your Shoe Tree sightings (It should have at least 50 pairs of shoes, be publicly accessible, and known as a "Shoe Tree" by the locals -- try asking for directions to a shoe tree and see what you get. Send a tip)

Shoe tossing

Shoe tossing , the act of using shoes as improvised projectiles or weapons, is a constituent of a number of folk sports and practices. Today, it is commonly the act of throwing a pair of shoes onto telephone wires, powerlines, or other raised wires. A related practice is shoe tossing onto trees or fences.

Shoes hung from overhead wires ("shoefiti")

Shoes hanging from a telephone wire in Gothenburg, Sweden
Shoe flinging or "shoefiti" is the practice of throwing shoes whose shoelaces have been tied together so that they hang from overhead wires such as power lines or telephone cables. The shoes are tied together by their laces, and the pair is then thrown at the wires as a sort of bolas. This practice plays a widespread, though mysterious, role in adolescent folklore in the United States. Shoe flinging has also been reported in many other countries.
Shoe flinging occurs throughout the United States, in rural as well as in urban areas. Usually, the shoes flung at the wires are sneakers; elsewhere, especially in rural areas, many different varieties of shoes, including leather shoes and boots, also are thrown.[citation needed]
A number of sinister explanations have been proposed as to why this is done. Some say that shoes hanging from the wires advertise a local crack house where crack cocaine is used and sold[1] (in which case the shoes are sometimes referred to as "Crack Tennies").[citation needed] It can also relate to a place where Heroin is sold to symbolize the fact that once you take Heroin you can never 'leave': a reference to the addictive nature of the drug. Others claim that the shoes so thrown commemorate a gang-related murder, or the death of a gang member, or as a way of marking gang turf.[2] A newsletter from the mayor of Los Angeles, California cites fears of many Los Angeles residents that "these shoes indicate sites at which drugs are sold or worse yet, gang turf," and that city and utility employees had launched a program to remove the shoes.[3] However, the practice also occurs along relatively remote stretches of rural highways that are unlikely scenes for gang murders, and have no structures at all to be crack houses.
A Boy Scout throws his boots over the Philmont entrance sign at Base Camp, a longstanding tradition.
Other less sinister explanations have been ventured for the practice. Some[who?] claim that shoes are flung to commemorate the end of a school year, or a forthcoming marriage as part of a rite of passage. In Scotland, it has been said that when a young man has lost his virginity he tosses his shoes over telephone wires to announce this to his peers.[4] It has been suggested that the custom may have originated with members of the military, who are said to have thrown military boots, often painted orange or some other conspicuous color, at overhead wires as a part of a rite of passage upon completing basic training or on leaving the service.[5] In the 1997 film Wag the Dog, shoe tossing features as an allegedly spontaneous mass cultural manifestation of tribute to Sgt. William Schumann, played by Woody Harrelson, who has purportedly been “shot down behind enemy lines” in Albania, although the development has been orchestrated by the public relations team of the U.S. President in its effort to divert attention from an incipient scandal concerning his sexual impropriety.[2]
Others claim that the shoes are stolen from other people and tossed over the wires as a sort of bullying tactic, or as a practical joke played on drunkards.[5] Others simply say that shoe flinging is a way to get rid of shoes that are no longer wanted, are uncomfortable, or do not fit.[4] It may also be another manifestation of the human instinct to leave their mark on, and decorate, their surroundings.[5] It has been reported that workmen often throw shoes if they are not paid for waxing floors.[citation needed]
In some neighborhoods, shoes tied together and hanging from power lines or tree branches signify that someone has died. The shoes belong to the dead person. The reason they are hanging, legend has it, is that when the dead person's spirit returns, it will walk that high above the ground, that much closer to heaven.[4] Another superstition holds that the tossing of shoes over the power lines outside of a house is a way to keep the property safe from ghosts. Yet another legend involves that shoes hanging from telephone wires signals someone leaving the neighborhood onto bigger and better things.[citation needed] Of course, only each individual shoe-thrower knows why his/her pair of shoes now hangs from a wire.

Shoe tree

The Shoe Tree in Morley Field, San Diego.[6]
A shoe tree, not to be confused with the shoe-preservation device of the same name, is a tree (or, occasionally, a powerline pole or other wooden object) that has been festooned with old shoes.[7] Shoe trees are generally located alongside a major local thoroughfare, and may have a theme (such as high-heeled shoes). There are currently at least seventy-six such shoe trees in the United States,[8] and an undetermined number elsewhere.

Competitive boot throwing

Boot throwing has been a competitive sport in New Zealand for many years, although not one that is taken very seriously. Gumboots or Wellington boots are the heavy rubber boots worn by most farm workers and many other outdoor workers. A competition to see who can throw a gumboot the furthest is a feature of many Agricultural Field Days in the rural communities. The town of Taihape in the central North Island is particularly identified with this sport; they claim to be the Gum Boot Throwing Capital of New Zealand. They hold an annual competition in the main street and award a Golden Gumboot as the trophy; see Wellie wanging.
Since 2003 the sport has been practiced competitively in Eastern Europe. The 2004 World Championship Competition was won by Germany who is hosting the 2005 Competition at Döbeln. Teams were also expected from Sweden, Estonia and Russia. Boot throwing has been a popular sport in Finland since 1976 when the first Finnish Championships of boot throwing has been organized.

In popular culture

In Wag the Dog, a 1997 film, a political spin doctor played by Robert De Niro used shoe-tossing as a propaganda weapon to commemorate a fictitious veteran of a war they made up by manipulating news media.
In Big Fish, a 2003 fantasy drama film, Jenny Hill, a young girl in the town of Spectre, throws the shoes of protagonist Edward Bloom (Ewan McGregor) over telephone wires to discourage him from leaving the town.
In episode six of the fifth year of the television series Viva La Bam, the protagonists abandon a shoe in which they were sailing down the Delaware River and tie it to a tree "like they do in the ghetto".
In "Like Mike", an antagonistic character tosses the main protagonists shoes (Michael Jordan's shoes, a pair of Nikes from MJ's childhood) over a wire, just for them to be retrieved during a thunder storm again.
In the anime series, Azumanga Daioh, character Osaka throws her shoe to forecast the weather, only to end up in a garbage truck! Recently on the Comedy Central Show Tosh.0 there was an episode of shoe tossing and was referred to as hood rat mystery
In the 2008 film Sex Drive, one of the lead characters, Felicia, played by Amanda Crew, throws her shoes into a shoe tree next to a highway. The inspiration for the scene came when writer John Morris saw a shoe tree in Reno, Nevada and put it in the script. For the film, a tree was covered in 480 pairs of shoes, which were then subsequently removed.[9]

Abandoned footwear

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Abandoned footwear, such as a lone boot or shoe, has often been noted in out-of-the-way places like ponds or by the side of roads. [1][2] Sometimes the shoes may even be new and fashionable.[3]
There are many hypotheses about why this phenomenon seems to more often involve footwear than other types of clothing.[4][5] Shoes, being more sturdily constructed than most other types of clothing, will last longer after being abandoned outdoors. Leather shoes, for instance, are estimated to last for 25-40 years outside.[6] Some shoe abandonment is intentional, as in shoe tossing, in which shoes are tied together by their laces and thrown in great numbers into trees, over power lines, or over fences.
An unusual abundance of abandoned shoes was found on Miami's Palmetto Expressway on Friday, 2nd January, 2009. Thousands of assorted shoes of all kinds and conditions were scattered across the highway, disrupting traffic for many hours. The shoes were collected for the charity Soles4Soles which redistributes shoes to needy people. This unusually large batch of shoes was expected to go to Haiti.[7][8]

Artistic use

Some artists such as poets derive insight and inspiration from abandoned footwear - a form of art known as objet trouvé.[9] The fisherman hauling up an old boot, rather than a fish, is a comic-strip cliché. In Cinderella, the lost slipper is a classic example of the literary device of the 'lost object'.[10]
The theme of abandoned footwear and their untold story is explored in detail in the novel, Jen-Zen and the One Shoe Diaries by author Julie Ann Shapiro.[11] In the novel, her character describes the phenomenon, “The forgotten shoes are everywhere: littering the side of the highway, floating in the tide, going upstream with the Salmon, or occupying a field like a dead body,discarded and left to rot.” The novelist described the backstory of her novel, which offers much insight about the abandoned footwear from an art, societal and philosophical perspective.
In Southern California I noticed flip flops and running shoes left behind on the beach, the freeways, construction sites and parking lots and felt this uncanny urge propelling me to write about them. I couldn’t escape them, nor the unshakable sadness and loss I felt emanating from the shoes themselves. Why singular shoes I kept asking myself? Is it a Cinderella complex? Is this a poem I should write or a short story? I wrote them all and then one pivotal day I remembered a time as a teenager when my friends and I played with a Ouija board and a shoe moved by itself. It was this big aha moment!
The author noted that, "... real life photographer, Randall Louis Hamilton contacted me and mentioned having a shoe photo collection, proving that life sometimes is stranger than fiction." The two artists have since collaborated on their coincidental works.[11]
Folklore consists of legends, music, oral history, proverbs, jokes, popular beliefs,and customs that are the traditions of that culture, subculture, or group. It is also the set of practices through which those expressive genres are shared. The study of folklore is sometimes called folkloristics. The word 'folklore' was first used by the English antiquarian William Thoms in a letter published by the London Journal in 1846. [1] In usage, there is a continuum between folklore and mythology. Stith Thompson made a major attempt to index the motifs of both folklore and mythology, providing an outline into which new motifs can be placed, and scholars can keep track of all older motifs.
Folklore can be divided into four areas of study: artifact (such as voodoo dolls), describable and transmissible entity (oral tradition), culture, and behavior (rituals). These areas do not stand alone, however, as often a particular item or element may fit into more than one of these areas.[2]

Artifacts

The three wise monkeys over the Tōshō-gū shrine in Nikkō, Japan
Objects such as dolls, decorative items used in religious rituals, hand-built houses and barns,[3] and handmade clothing and other crafts are considered[by whom?] to be folk artifacts, grouped within the field as "material culture". Additionally, figures that depict characters from folklore, such as statues of the three wise monkeys may be considered to be folklore artifacts, depending on how they are used within a culture.[4] The operative definition would depend on whether the artifacts are used and appreciated within the same community in which they are made, and whether they follow a community aesthetic.

Oral tradition

Folklore can contain religious or mythic elements, it equally concerns itself with the sometimes mundane traditions of everyday life. Folklore frequently ties the practical and the esoteric into one narrative package. It has often been conflated with mythology, and vice versa, because it has been assumed that any figurative story that does not pertain to the dominant beliefs of the time is not of the same status as those dominant beliefs.[citation needed] Thus, Roman religion is called "myth" by Christians. In that way, both "myth" and "folklore" have become catch-all terms for all figurative narratives which do not correspond with the dominant belief structure.
Sometimes "folklore" is religious in nature, like the tales of the Welsh Mabinogion or those found in Icelandic skaldic poetry. Many of the tales in the Golden Legend of Jacob de Voragine also embody folklore elements in a Christian context, as well as the tales of Old Mr. Brennan. Examples of such Christian mythology are the themes woven round Saint George or Saint Christopher. In this case, the term "folklore" is being used in a pejorative sense. That is, while the tales of Odin the Wanderer have a religious value to the Norse who composed the stories, because it does not fit into a Christian configuration it is not considered "religious" by Christians who may instead refer to it as "folklore."
"Folktales" is a general term for different varieties of traditional narrative. The telling of stories appears to be a cultural universal, common to basic and complex societies alike. Even the forms folktales take are certainly similar from culture to culture, and comparative studies of themes and narrative ways have been successful in showing these relationships. Also it is considered to be an oral tale to be told for everybody.[clarification needed]
Hansel and Gretel is a fairy tale of Germanic origin, recorded by the Brothers Grimm in 1812. The tale has been adapted to various media, most notably the opera Hänsel und Gretel (1893) by Engelbert Humperdinck and a stop-motion animated feature film based on the opera. Artwork by Arthur Rackham, 1909
On the other hand, folklore can be used to accurately describe a figurative narrative, which has no sacred or religious content. In the Jungian view, which is but one method of analysis, it may instead pertain to unconscious psychological patterns, instincts or archetypes of the mind. This may or may not have components of the fantastic (such as magic, ethereal beings or the personification of inanimate objects). These folktales may or may not emerge from a religious tradition, but nevertheless speak to deep psychological issues. The familiar folktale, "Hansel and Gretel", is an example of this fine line. The manifest purpose of the tale may primarily be one of mundane instruction regarding forest safety or secondarily a cautionary tale about the dangers of famine to large families, but its latent meaning may evoke a strong emotional response due to the widely understood themes and motifs such as “The Terrible Mother”, “Death,” and “Atonement with the Father.”
There can be both a moral and psychological scope to the work, as well as entertainment value, depending upon the nature of the teller, the style of the telling, the ages of the audience members, and the overall context of the performance. Folklorists generally resist universal interpretations of narratives and, wherever possible, analyze oral versions of tellings in specific contexts, rather than print sources, which often show the work or bias of the writer or editor.
Contemporary narratives common in the Western world include the urban legend. There are many forms of folklore that are so common, however, that most people do not realize they are folklore, such as riddles, children's rhymes and ghost stories, rumors (including conspiracy theories), gossip, ethnic stereotypes, and holiday customs and life-cycle rituals. UFO abduction narratives can be seen, in some sense, to refigure the tales of pre-Christian Europe, or even such tales in the Bible as the Ascent of Elijah to heaven. Adrienne Mayor, in introducing a bibliography on the topic, noted that most modern folklorists are largely unaware of classical parallels and precedents, in materials that are only partly represented by the familiar designation Aesopica: "Ancient Greek and Roman literature contains rich troves of folklore and popular beliefs, many of which have counterparts in modern contemporary legends" (Such as Mayor, 2000).
Vladimir Propp's classic study Morphology of the Folktale (1928) became the basis of research into the structure of folklore texts. Propp discovered a uniform structure in Russian fairy tales. His book has been translated into English, Italian, Polish and other languages. The English translation was issued in USA in 1958, some 30 years after the publication of the original. It was met by approving reviews and significantly influenced later research on folklore and, more generally, structural semantics. Though his work was based on syntagmatic structure, it gave the scope to understand the structure of folktales, of which he discovered thirty one functions.[5]

Cultural

Folklorist William Bascom states that folklore has many cultural aspects, such as allowing for escape from societal consequences. In addition, folklore can also serve to validate a culture (romantic nationalism), as well as transmit a culture's morals and values. Folklore can also be the root of many cultural types of music. Country, blues, and bluegrass all originate from American folklore. Examples of artists which have used folkloric themes in their music would be: Bill Monroe, Flatt and Scruggs, Old Crow Medicine Show, Jim Croce, and many others. Folklore can also be used to assert social pressures, or relieve them, for example in the case of humor and carnival.
In addition, folklorists study medical, supernatural, religious, and political belief systems as an essential, often unspoken, part of expressive culture.

Rituals

Many rituals can sometimes be considered folklore, whether formalized in a cultural or religious system (e.g. weddings, baptisms, harvest festivals) or practiced within a family or secular context. For example, in certain parts of the United States (as well as other countries) one places a knife, or a pair of scissors, under the mattress to "cut the birth pains" after giving birth. Additionally, children's counting-out games can be defined as behavioral folklore.[6]